BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am Your response, as always, is a
dizzying exercise in avoiding the point while pretending that simply acknowledging ignorance is some kind of profound insight. It isn’t.
Unless, of course, my response, as always, is just another inherent component of the only possible world unfolding in the only possible reality.
Then the part where that includes your own responses in turn.
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am You keep throwing around
The Gap and Rummy’s Rule like a shield, hoping it absolves you from engaging with actual evidence. But at some point, you have to stop hiding behind philosophical agnosticism and face reality:
we know things.
We've been over this. You are apparently able to convince yourself that your own knowledge of the human brain "here and now" is such that, what, Nature provides you with the most rational assessments here post after post?
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am The fact that the brain is
staggeringly complex does not mean we are
nowhere close to understanding it. Quite the opposite—neuroscience has made
tremendous strides in mapping its structure, its functions, and its entirely
deterministic operations.
There is no mystery about whether the brain operates through physical laws—it does. What remains unknown are
specific details, not the fundamental principles.
Okay -- click -- just out of curiosity, given all that you think you know about determinism today vs. all that there is to be known about it -- scientifically/philosophically/theologically -- going back to the profound mystery that is the existence of existence itself, how close do you think you are to actually encompassing it all... ontologically? How about teleologically? 10%? 25%? 60%? 85%?
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am You ask, sarcastically, if
nature has fallen back on me to provide the "optimal assessment."
No, nature has provided something far more powerful: the scientific method.
Or, perhaps, more to the point, it has provided you over and again with the capacity to confront those who don't agree with you as sarcastically as anything I have noted of you here. But that's different, of course, because your assessment here really does reflect the most rational set of assumptions.
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am A system designed
not to confirm personal biases, but to
disprove them. My position is not based on some personal hunch—it is grounded in
repeated, testable, and falsifiable scientific principles. Unlike your endless "what ifs," these principles hold up
until someone actually disproves them. And guess what?
No one has.
Hmm. Maybe -- click -- I'm just not understanding you correctly.
Are you or are you not arguing that what we post here is just another unherent manifestation of determinism? And that your own at times declamatory reactions to those who do not agree with you is in turn still just Nature unfolding wholly in sync with the laws of matter?
In other words, there's determinism understood by some as indeed encompassing
everything that we think, feel, intuit, say and do. Then there are those who seem to accept this but only if what they themselves think, feel, intuit, say and do is recognized
as the optimal frame of mind.
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am You claim that, under determinism,
all beliefs must be equally valid because they are all determined.
This is a complete misunderstanding of how reasoning works. The fact that beliefs are caused
does not make them equally accurate.
Back to this then:
Imagine the universe being such that there is a free will part and a wholly determined part.
Those from the free will part are hovering above planet Earth in the wholly determined part. They note that over and over and over again you and I and everyone else down here are choosing things.
But then they remind themselves that what we in fact choose we are not in fact choosing freely.
They think to themselves, "it's hard to believe that everything unfolding down there is unfolding autonomically in a wholly determined manner. We see them all toppling over onto each other like so many dominoes. But, really, if they are interacting entirely on cue given the laws of Nature there can be no responsibility as we in the free will sector understand it."
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am You say your thinking is
fractured and fragmented—and believe you. But that’s not an argument. That’s just an admission that your skepticism is
directionless.
No, what I argue "here and now" is that given free will, the either/or world is bursting at the seams with any number of things we can all agree on. But given determinism as some understand it, the is/ought is actually no less interchangeable with the either/or world. Why? Because acquiring value judgments and acting on them is no less entirely compelled by brains no less in sync with the laws of matter.
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am You’ve built yourself a
philosophical escape hatch—a way to never commit to anything, never stake a claim, never acknowledge when you’re wrong. You pretend this is intellectual humility, but it’s really
just an excuse to avoid dealing with evidence.
Again, given determinism as I understand it "here and now", any commitment from either one of us is such that any evidence we come to accept is no less "beyond our control".
Though, again, I am no more able to demonstrate this than you are able to demonstrate that what you think now, even 10,000 years into the future it will still reflect the default assumption in both the scientific and philosophical communities.
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 1:04 am You say you "hope" your conclusions are
effectively challenged one day—well, here’s your chance. You’ve been challenged. Show
one single instance where conservation laws fail in brain activity. Provide
one single falsification of determinism. Until you do, you’re just
floating in an abyss of doubt, while the rest of us
stand on solid ground, using actual evidence to understand the world.
Back to that again. We are all determined to post what we do, but that doesn't make you any less arrogant when insisting that your own posts "naturally" reflect the correct assessment.